A former Slovenian comedian, Marjan Sarec, nominated by a centre-left grouping of parties, faces a parliamentary vote to become prime

Photo: STA

A former Slovenian comedian, Marjan Sarec, nominated by a centre-left grouping of parties, faces a parliamentary vote to become prime minister today. He needs the support of a majority of the 90-seat chamber to clinch the country’s top job.

The vote follows an inconclusive June 23 election, where the Eurosceptic and anti-immigration Slovenian Democratic Party, led by former PM Janez Janza, claimed victory with 25% of the vote but has since been unable to forge a ruling coalition.

Instead, Sarec offers a centre-left alliance spanning pro-EU centrist parties and The Left party. He is likely to take a cautious stance towards the EU, seeking an improvement of the economic union rather than a rejection of it. This may endear him to President Macron’s EU reform drive, but the strong showing of the Eurosceptic vote from a traditionally staunch EU member will likely concern Brussels.

Today’s vote will be decided by whether The Left, which has traditionally been anti-establishment, supports Sarec’s five-party coalition. Indications are they are likely to do just this, but the hard work to cobble together a cabinet lies ahead.

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